Ionizing radiation delivered by specific antibody is therapeutic against a fungal infection
- 20 August 2003
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 100 (19) , 10942-10947
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1731272100
Abstract
There is an urgent need for new antimicrobial therapies to combat drug resistance, new pathogens, and the relative inefficacy of current therapy in compromised hosts. Ionizing radiation can kill microorganisms quickly and efficiently, but this modality has not been exploited as a therapeutic antimicrobial strategy. We have developed methods to target ionizing radiation to a fungal cell by labeling a specific mAb with the therapeutic radioisotopes Rhenium-188 and Bismuth-213. Radiolabeled antibody killed cells of human pathogenic fungus Cryptococcus neoformans in vitro, thus converting an antibody with no inherent antifungal activity into a microbicidal molecule. Administration of radiolabeled antibody to mice with C. neoformans infection delivered 213Bi and 188Re to the sites of infection, reduced their organ fungal burden, and significantly prolonged their survival without apparent toxicity. This study establishes the principle that targeted radiation can be used for the therapy of an infectious disease, and suggests that it may have wide applicability as an antimicrobial strategy.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence for Antibody-Catalyzed Ozone Formation in Bacterial Killing and InflammationScience, 2002
- Adjunctive Immune Therapy for Fungal InfectionsClinical Infectious Diseases, 2001
- Delivery of the α-emitting radioisotope bismuth-213 to solid tumors via single-chain Fv and diabody moleculesNuclear Medicine and Biology, 2000
- Radioimmunotherapy: Designer molecules to potentiate effective therapySeminars in Radiation Oncology, 2000
- Monoclonal Antibody–Mediated Toxicity inCryptococcus neoformansInfection: Mechanism and Relationship to Antibody IsotypeThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1999
- Vascular Targeted Radioimmunotherapy with 213Bi—An α-Particle EmitterNuclear Medicine and Biology, 1998
- 188Re(V)-DMSA revisitedNuclear Medicine Communications, 1998
- Crisis in Infectious Diseases: Time for a New Paradigm?Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1996
- Antibodies Elicited by a Cryptococcus neoformans-Tetanus Toxoid Conjugate Vaccine Have the Same Specificity as Those Elicited in InfectionThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1992
- Biological and electron microscopic changes in gamma radiated Cryptococcus neoformansMycopathologia, 1972